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I had a wood burning stove installed. Two story house, fairly steep roof. The installer was 76 years old and he climb up the ladder, got on the roof and installed the chimney stack. No helper, no safety rope. I was silently prayingâŠ.
My parents were like that. Most extremely non-technical household repairs they did themselves. When my father died, my mother had assisted him and retained most of the skills she learned through him â but couldnât bend underneath appliances or get up on a ladder (at least, SHOULDNâT have!) It irritated her to pay to have simple repairs done by tradesmen. (She was convinced the guy who advertised as a handyman through her church way overcharged her. I wish she had called me first to help.)
Iâve always tried to fix things that were not outside of my general skill-set. Took 2-years of electronics in high school (50+ years ago) and used to repair TVâs by going to the nearby 7-11 store and using their vacuum tube tester and buying replacements from their âmost commonly usedâ tubes stock! Now I watch YouTube videos to show me how to replace my cars headlights!
Depends on what it is. If itâs plumbing and I have to get down on my hands and knees, it is problematic. Getting down is easy, all I have to do is fall. Getting back up again requires some forethought.
When we wanted something fixed, weâd just take it to Dad and tell him it couldnât be done. Usually, he would get it fixed up. :) Until he hit 90 that is, he did slow down then.
Four inches on the ground, Iâm told âat your age you canât go out and shovel that heavy snowâ, forty minutes later I am back inside with the porch, sidewalk, double driveway and auto all cleared of the white menace and de-icer pellets spread on all concrete surfaces. I still canâŠmy achy joints remind me perhaps I shouldnât.
I used to work in a local hardware store. One day one of our local contractors came in and I asked him, âDo you hate taking over a botched DIY job?â He said, âOh no, you can justify almost any charge on one of those!! Theyâll pay it just to end the embarrassment.â
I think our churchâs #1 volunteer handyman, Bill, may have only been in his 70s when our then new pastor posted on Facebook about all the little jobs he had done and closed with âEvery church needs a Bill.â Still #1 in his 80s except if it involves climbing.
juicebruce about 1 year ago
The Challenge !
sergioandrade Premium Member about 1 year ago
âMen remember, if the women donât find you handsome, they should at least find you handyâ Red Green
yoey1957 about 1 year ago
If it involves a ladder over say, 4ft tall, Yep! Too old!
fuzzbucket Premium Member about 1 year ago
If you try that with me, Iâll tell you how to do it, and Iâll supervise.
Zykoic about 1 year ago
I had a wood burning stove installed. Two story house, fairly steep roof. The installer was 76 years old and he climb up the ladder, got on the roof and installed the chimney stack. No helper, no safety rope. I was silently prayingâŠ.
max_imous about 1 year ago
Double entendre â put a comma after âpluggerâ
PraiseofFolly about 1 year ago
My parents were like that. Most extremely non-technical household repairs they did themselves. When my father died, my mother had assisted him and retained most of the skills she learned through him â but couldnât bend underneath appliances or get up on a ladder (at least, SHOULDNâT have!) It irritated her to pay to have simple repairs done by tradesmen. (She was convinced the guy who advertised as a handyman through her church way overcharged her. I wish she had called me first to help.)
ctolson about 1 year ago
I think itâs worse if youâre a Mechanical Engineer Plugger.
zforray about 1 year ago
Iâve always tried to fix things that were not outside of my general skill-set. Took 2-years of electronics in high school (50+ years ago) and used to repair TVâs by going to the nearby 7-11 store and using their vacuum tube tester and buying replacements from their âmost commonly usedâ tubes stock! Now I watch YouTube videos to show me how to replace my cars headlights!
Teto85 Premium Member about 1 year ago
Heâs not too old. Just too fat.
DaBump Premium Member about 1 year ago
The day I canât fix it, just throw me in an old pine box and bury me in the cold, cold ground next to Granny Clampett.
Zen-of-Zinfandel about 1 year ago
Plugger doesnât like being told heâs too old.
Just-me about 1 year ago
Depends on what it is. If itâs plumbing and I have to get down on my hands and knees, it is problematic. Getting down is easy, all I have to do is fall. Getting back up again requires some forethought.
gooddavid about 1 year ago
When we wanted something fixed, weâd just take it to Dad and tell him it couldnât be done. Usually, he would get it fixed up. :) Until he hit 90 that is, he did slow down then.
wndflower1 about 1 year ago
yup! just "let me at it " then call a handyman to come fix what he screwed up
bluephrog about 1 year ago
Four inches on the ground, Iâm told âat your age you canât go out and shovel that heavy snowâ, forty minutes later I am back inside with the porch, sidewalk, double driveway and auto all cleared of the white menace and de-icer pellets spread on all concrete surfaces. I still canâŠmy achy joints remind me perhaps I shouldnât.
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
And start getting professional estimates.
wildlandwaters about 1 year ago
âŠjust make sure ya got the plumber on speed dial!
Bruce1253 about 1 year ago
I used to work in a local hardware store. One day one of our local contractors came in and I asked him, âDo you hate taking over a botched DIY job?â He said, âOh no, you can justify almost any charge on one of those!! Theyâll pay it just to end the embarrassment.â
gcarlson about 1 year ago
I think our churchâs #1 volunteer handyman, Bill, may have only been in his 70s when our then new pastor posted on Facebook about all the little jobs he had done and closed with âEvery church needs a Bill.â Still #1 in his 80s except if it involves climbing.
puddleglum1066 about 1 year ago
âBut if I fixed it for you, how would you young-uns learn how to fix things yourself? Now fetch Grandpa another bourbon.â